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TOURISM

Procida becomes first island to win Italy’s capital of culture

Procida has been named Italy's capital of culture for 2022, the first time an island has been awarded the title.

Procida becomes first island to win Italy's capital of culture
Procida is a short boat ride from the city of Naples. Photo: Laurent Emmanuel/AFP

Picturesque Procida, which lies in the Bay of Naples, was chosen ahead of nine other finalists: Ancona, Bari, Cerveteri, L'Aquila, Pieve di Soligo, Taranto, Trapani, Verbania and Volterra.

With fewer than 10,500 inhabitants, Procida was the smallest of all the candidates, but impressed the Ministry of Culture's judges with a proposal focused on sustainable, non-seasonal tourism that they said could provide a model for other Italian seaside towns looking to attract visitors who want more than a beach.

READ ALSO: How to spend the perfect day out in Procida

Titled 'La cultura non isola' or 'Culture doesn't isolate' – a pun on the Italian word isola, which can mean both 'island' and 'isolate' – Procida's proposal involves inviting 240 artists to create a programme spread over 330 days of the year. It also foresees improving the island's links to the mainland and the city of Naples, a half-hour boat ride away. 

Procida will receive €1 million towards the plan.

Often overlooked by the tourists who flock to Capri and Ischia, Procida has retained the old-fashioned charm sometimes lacking in its more famous neighbours. Its colourful fishing harbour, steep winding streets and white sandy beaches have provided the backdrop to period pieces Il Postino and The Talented Mr Ripley, among other films.

READ ALSO: The stunning movie scene locations you simply have to visit in Italy

There are already plenty of reasons to visit, whether it's the sea view from the Abbey of St. Michael the Archangel, dramatic clifftop prison the Palazzo d'Avalos, the pastel shades of Corricella marina, the sheltered beaches of Chiaia and Chiaiolella, or local delicacies from sea urchins to wild rabbit or lemon-cream pastries.

As well as adding new artistic attractions, Procida's 2022 proposal said it would protect the island's existing natural and cultural heritage, with a focus on 'slow tourism' and attracting repeat, year-round visitors who offer a long-term contribution.


Colourful Coricella marina. Photo: Laurent Gence via Unsplash

While visiting the island remains impossible for most people both outside and inside Italy under the coronavirus travel restrictions currently in place, tourism will recover by the time Procida takes its title, culture minister Dario Franceschini assured.

“By 2022 we will have returned to normality and tourism and culture will come back as strong and important as they were before the pandemic,” he said.

Italy's 2020 capital of culture, Parma, had its run extended into 2021 to make up for the difficulties of the past year. 

Procida will be succeeded as cultural capital in 2023 by the towns of Brescia and Bergamo, which will share the title in recognition of the heavy toll taken by the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

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VENICE

What are the new rules for tourist groups visiting Venice?

The famed Italian city of Venice will restrict tour group sizes from summer 2024 in an effort to regulate crowds of tourists that throng the streets.

What are the new rules for tourist groups visiting Venice?

The Italian city of Venice announced on Saturday new regulations on the size of tourist groups to reduce the number of huge crowds and improve the lives of locals. 

The measure will come into effect from June. The use of loudspeakers will also be banned as they “create confusion” the city said in a statement.

Elizabeth Pesce, the city’s security councillor said: “This is an important measure to improve the management of organized groups and promote sustainable tourism.”

The rule is an amendment to the police and urban security regulation dedicated to ‘regulating the methods of conducting visits for accompanied groups, with particular attention to the needs to protect residents and promoting pedestrian mobility’.

Simone Venturini, tourism councillor for the city added: “The measure is part of a broader framework of interventions aimed at ensuring a greater balance between the needs of those who live in the city and those who come to visit it.”

He concluded the introduction of the new rule on June 1st will give operators enough time to organise themselves.

The regulation was announced just five weeks after the city said it would introduce a fee of €5 for day trippers starting from April 25th to May 5th this year. The fee will also apply for the rest of the weekends in May and June as well as the first two weeks of July. Tickets will be sold via an online platform that’s expected to be up later this month. 

Both the moves come after UNESCO warned it could list the city as an at-risk heritage site, partly due to the risk of over-tourism.

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